I think the long version of "MF" (all one word) isn't caught. I noticed it in the George Carlin thread the other day. Nobody actually posted it, we all just tested his "six words you can't say on television" and previewed it. Any other ones I've seen have been pointed out months ago.

I've figured a lot of them out, but not all of them. Unfortunately, starting a thread might not be safe, because there are a few that are clearly inappropriate that the filter doesn't catch. I'd suggest writing a post, then previewing it, without posting it. It'll show you all the replacements

Thanks, that's a good tip. I find it a little odd that the abbreviated versions are replaced, but some of the long versions aren't.

I've figured a lot of them out, but not all of them. Unfortunately, starting a thread might not be safe, because there are a few that are clearly inappropriate that the filter doesn't catch. I'd suggest writing a post, then previewing it, without posting it. It'll show you all the replacements

Thanks, that's a good tip. I find it a little odd that the abbreviated versions are replaced, but some of the long versions aren't.

I expect it's hard for our unfailingly polite moderators to remember every profanity and obscenity out there

I've figured a lot of them out, but not all of them. Unfortunately, starting a thread might not be safe, because there are a few that are clearly inappropriate that the filter doesn't catch. I'd suggest writing a post, then previewing it, without posting it. It'll show you all the replacements

Thanks, that's a good tip. I find it a little odd that the abbreviated versions are replaced, but some of the long versions aren't.

I expect it's hard for our unfailingly polite moderators to remember every profanity and obscenity out there

It's more that the text speak abbreviations are filtered, but you can write it out longhand and it's fine.

In the UK twit with an a is offensive way to describe a female body part. Not sure if its used in the US tho.

I used twit with an a to describe a really annoying person. Apparently, it's more acceptable to my mother for me to call someone a twit with an a, than it is to hear me call someone a "Richard Cranium"

really? my mother would cut my head off if she ever heard me say it and im not too far from 40

Ok, havent found an answer on here yet, throw me a rope: What are the origins of the term "special snowflake"? I totally get what it means on here, and it has crept into my off-board vocabulary, and I love it. I just wanna know where it started! It remindes me of some creepy, annoying, "you are so wonderful" childrens book.

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"If someone else posted this, I would be convinced they were making it up..."

Ok, havent found an answer on here yet, throw me a rope: What are the origins of the term "special snowflake"? I totally get what it means on here, and it has crept into my off-board vocabulary, and I love it. I just wanna know where it started! It remindes me of some creepy, annoying, "you are so wonderful" childrens book.

We've been using it for a long time (predating this incarnation of the forum).

Ok, havent found an answer on here yet, throw me a rope: What are the origins of the term "special snowflake"? I totally get what it means on here, and it has crept into my off-board vocabulary, and I love it. I just wanna know where it started! It remindes me of some creepy, annoying, "you are so wonderful" childrens book.

We use it to mean a person with a huge sense of entitlement who makes demands for attention or service that are so rude and/or outrageous that among people with senses of entitlement s/he stands out and belongs in a class of his/her own.

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I'm away from sanity right now...please leave a message after the beep.

Ok, havent found an answer on here yet, throw me a rope: What are the origins of the term "special snowflake"? I totally get what it means on here, and it has crept into my off-board vocabulary, and I love it. I just wanna know where it started! It remindes me of some creepy, annoying, "you are so wonderful" childrens book.

I thought it originated from a line in Fight Club.

Quote

You are not a beautiful and unique snowflake. You are the same decaying organic matter as everyone else, and we are all part of the same compost pile. Chuck Palahniuk, Fight Club, Chapter 17

Though it's certainly possible that the term was around before Palahniuk used it.